Abstract
To provide the most comprehensive picture of species phylogeny and
phylogeography of European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), we analysed
mtDNA control region (610 bp) of 1469 samples of roe deer from Central
and Eastern Europe and included into the analyses additional 1541 mtDNA
sequences from GenBank from other regions of the continent. We detected
two mtDNA lineages of the species: European and Siberian one (an
introgression of C. pygargus mtDNA into C. capreolus). The Siberian
lineage was most frequent in eastern part of the continent and declined
towards Central Europe. The European lineage contained three clades
(Central, Eastern and Western) composed of 2 to 8 subclades, many of
which were separated in space. The Western clade appeared to have a
discontinuous range from Portugal to Russia. Most of the subclades in
the Central and the Eastern clades were under expansion during the
Weichselian glacial period before the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), while
the expansion time of the Western clade overlapped with the Eemian
interglacial. High genetic diversity of extant roe deer is the result of
their survival during the LGM in a large, contiguous range spanning from
the Iberian Peninsula to the Caucasus Mts. and in two northern refugia.